Introduction to Scotland

Images of Scotland:
Glasgow, Harris, Mull and Argyll

Scotland is a nation of some 5.3 million people occupying the
northern third of the island of Great Britain, which lies off the north west
coast of mainland Europe. Large scale emigration in the past means that at
least a further 20 million people worldwide trace their origins to Scotland,
including over 9 million living in the United States, over 4 million living in
Canada, and large numbers in just about every other corner of the globe:
including, apparently, 250,000 in Russia.

For a small country (by population the 113th largest in the world)
Scotland has a history and a sense of identity that gives it an enormously
powerful and positive image worldwide. This is, after all, the nation that gave
the world golf; scotch whisky;
tartan; the kilt; bagpipes;
haggis; a remarkable number of advances in science and engineering; and a poet,
Robert Burns, whose
birthday, on 25 January, each year is said to be the second most celebrated
birthday worldwide.

Scotland shares its only land border with England, to the south,
and it is otherwise surrounded by sea: the North Sea to the east, the Irish Sea
to the south west, and the Atlantic to the north and west. The total land area
is 30,400 square miles or 78,800 square kilometers, giving it an overall
population density of 168 people per square mile or 65 people per square
kilometer. A large proportion of the population is found in a relatively small
part of the country, the Central Lowlands, in which you find Scotland's capital
city, Edinburgh, with a
population of some 465,000, and its largest city
Glasgow, whose wider conurbation
has a population of some 1,200,000.

Very large areas of the country are relatively sparsely populated.
These include the Southern Uplands, the often overlooked area stretching from
the Central Lowlands to the English Border, and the Highlands, the 60% of the
country to the north and west of the Highland Boundary Fault which defines the
northern edge of the Central Lowlands. The land use closely follows the
underlying geology.

As well as the mainland, Scotland has some 790 islands, which help
contribute to a coastline that has most recently been estimated to be some
16,500km long, or some 8% of the total coastline of Europe. Some 97 of
Scotland's islands are inhabited, by a total of just over 100,000 people. The
islands lie in four main groups: Orkney, off the north coast of
Mainland Scotland; Shetland,
which lies between 50 and 100 miles north east of
Orkney; the
Western Isles or Outer
Hebrides, which lie in a 130 mile north-south arc some 40 miles west of
mainland Scotland in the Atlantic; and the Inner Hebrides, a large number of
islands closer to the west coast of mainland Scotland.

People have been living in what is now Scotland for around 10,000
years, and making their mark on the landscape for at least 5,000 of those
years. The landscape is dotted by cairns, stones, homes, hillforts, and brochs
left by our distant ancestors. There is also plenty of evidence on view of the
Romans, the Norse, and the Picts: and of those who converted the country to
Christianity from the 400s.

Scotland itself was formed by the conquest or assimilation of
Pictland by the Scots of Dalriada in the 840s, and it
spent the next 900 years as a more-or-less independent country despite often
being at war with the neighbours to the south, who over time became the
Norman-dominated English. 500 years of conflict with England was only part of a
very violent history that also saw three centuries of conflict with the Norse,
repeated conflict between lowland and highland Scotland, constant conflict
between Highland clans, multi-dimensional conflict over
religion, and a series of conflicts over
the succession to the Scottish crown. A tangible reminder of this turbulent
history lies in the literally thousands of castles and tower houses built here,
many of which remain on view in forms that range from partial ruins to
magnificent palaces.

In 1603 the King of Scotland,
James VI, also became the
King of England, and immediately moved to London. The crowns of Scotland and
England have been unified ever since. In 1707, under pressure from England, the
independent Scottish Parliament voted itself out of existence by accepting an
Act of Union with England. Over the following 190 years Scotland was to a
greater or lesser degree conjoined with England, while always maintaining a
separate legal and education system. During this period its economy was
transformed, largely through access to the British Empire, an Empire in which
Scots played a disproportionately large role, with Glasgow becoming known as
the "Second city of the Empire". Yet increasingly during the 1900s many in
Scotland still sought a greater say in the control of our own affairs.

In 1999 a devolved government was created in Scotland and the
Scottish Parliament
resumed sitting, after a gap of 292 years, with powers over a wide range of
domestic issues. And in 2007, exactly 300 years after the Act of Union, Scots
elected the Scottish National Party into power in the devolved Scottish
Government. This reflected a growing degree of confidence and maturity across
Scotland which means that for the first time in over a thousand years we tend
not to feel ourselves to be anyone's poor neighbour. In September 2014 those
living in Scotland fairly narrowly voted against it becoming an independent
country.

Today's Scotland is far more than the sum of its parts. Its
geology and
geography combine to give it a scenic
beauty and a scope for adventure that, for its size, is unmatched anywhere; its
varied and turbulent history gives an
endlessly fascinating added dimension to everything you see; and the outlook of
its people says much for the quality of the welcome you will receive. Garnish
this mix with the golf, the whisky, the tartan and
the ever changing moods of our weather, and you end
up with a truly unique and memorable place.